Question:

soft plastic rigs for bass?

wat is every single way to rig soft plastics for bass and how to do it

Answer:

well... As a general rule of thumb, go with natural colors on Overcast, cloudy days, and switch to something brighter on sunny days! Good natural colors are Camo, Junebug, Watermelon Shad, Green Pumpkin, or Motoroil- My pics for Bright colors are, Tomato Core, Chartruse, Firetiger But if I could pick one color/lure/technique, it would be... A 5 Yum LPT Dinger in the color Junebug, with a 3/0 widegap work keeper hook. Attach a splitshot sinker about this big ( ) a foot above your hook and wing it out and lift your rod tip form 10 o' clock to 12 o' clock, reel in any slack and repeat. The whole time you should be feeling for a lite bite! Hope this helps and from angler to angler, good luck!
Beside the Carolina and Texas rig I found a new rig in a copy of Bassmaster last year called the Bungie rig. Take a crappie jig head about 1/32oz and and with wire snips clip the eye and part of the hook leaving 1/8in of hook shank. I use a Zoom Trick worm cut 1/4in off front of worm then put superglue on jig head and stick in front of worm. then tie on a offset worm hook, i use a 3/0 size and thread through center of worm. this is a awesome rig that falls slow and when sitting on the bottom the tail floats and curls over, very natural.
There are several, Texas rig is good, Carolina rig is good, you can Wacky Style rig where you just run the hook through the middle of the worm, Finesse rig is great for clear water, and right mow the shakey head rig is the big thing on the circuit right now. Check these out, there are endless images and techniques on the internet, just type in the rig.....i would try and explain each one........but we might invent a new one through poor communication, lol.
This okorder /
every single way...?? add all your answers together. you won't get every single way. be right back. here's a few. l copied from one of my previous answers. and this is only worms. the most popular rig is texas style where you slide a worm weight up the line, tie on a worm hook and put on your plastic worm usually burying the point of the hook back into the worm making the rig weedless. also popular is the carolina rig which usually uses a heavier weight and a leader from a swivel to the hook anywhere from 2 to 6 feet long, usually 24. then there is the dropshot rig where you tie the hook on with a palomar knot leaving about a 24 tag end which you run back thru the hook eye to keep the point riding up. the weight is then attached to the very end of the line. either a swivel sinker or a special dropshot sinker. l personally tie an overhand knot at the end and put on enough split shot to give me casting weight. there is what is called wacky style where you hook the worm in the middle or somewhere else other than the head and fish it either with or without a weight. shaking involves the use of a special flat jig head where you cast out and jiggle the rod tip and nothing else. jiggle, jiggle, rest, jiggle, rest, reel in a few inches and start again. you can do it with any of the previous rigs. just stand there for 10 minutes jiggling that rod tip. if you have to wait longer than that, go somewhere else. these are the main ways of rigging soft plastic baits. just get the correct size worm hooks to match the size plastic you are using.

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